Made, Not Born: Why Some Soldiers Are Better Than Others

Made, Not Born: Why Some Soldiers Are Better Than Others

by Bruce Newsome
Made, Not Born: Why Some Soldiers Are Better Than Others

Made, Not Born: Why Some Soldiers Are Better Than Others

by Bruce Newsome

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Overview

Why do the combat capabilities of individual soldiers vary so much? This book seeks to provide an answer to this and other questions about variability in combat performance. Some soldiers flee quickly from the battlefield, while others endure all hardships until the bitter end. Some combat units can perform numerous types of missions, while others cannot keep themselves organized during peacetime. Some militaries armed with obsolete weapons have out fought enemies with the latest weapons, just as some massively outnumbered armies have beaten back much larger opponents. In this first social scientific study of the effectiveness of combat troops, Newsome evaluates competing explanations for the varying combat capabilities and performances.

There are four main explanations, each emphasizing the influence of a single factor. The first focuses on material endowments. How well funded are the troops? Do they have the latest protective gear and the most advanced weaponry? Second, some analysts claim that democracies produce better commanders, superior strategies, more motivated personnel, or better-managed personnel; others, however, associated those characteristics with more authoritarian forms of government. Third is the idea that giving more power to the troops on the ground in individual combat units empowers them with decision-making capability and adaptability to fast-changing situations and circumstances. Newsome presents evidence that decentralized personnel management does correlate with superior combat performance. Fourth, soldier capabilities and performance often are assumed to reflect intrinsic attributes, such as prior civilian values. Newsome argues that the capabilities of combat soldiers are acquired through military training and other forms of conditioning, but he does not entirely discount the role of a soldier's individual character. In the age-old nature vs. nurture argument, he finds that intrinsic qualities do count, but that extrinsic factors, such as training and environment, matter even more.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780275998301
Publisher: Bloomsbury Academic
Publication date: 09/30/2007
Series: Praeger Security International
Pages: 216
Product dimensions: 6.14(w) x 9.21(h) x 0.56(d)

About the Author

Bruce Newsome is a research policy scientist at RAND in Santa Monica, California, where he has published on international relations, national security, terrorism, personnel and operations management, training, and modeling and simulations. He has a PhD in Strategic Studies from the University of Reading, England.

Table of Contents


Introduction     1
Domestic Politics     10
Combat Personnel Management     17
Force Employment, Command, Leadership, and Decision-Making     54
Combat Stress and Cohesion     85
Combat Motivation     107
Athleticism and Special Operations     134
Conclusion     147
Notes     157
Select Bibliography     195
Index     205

What People are Saying About This

Michael O'Hanlon

"Newsome zeroes in on a subject analysts often ignore—how good are a country's soldiers? When studying warfare, we tend to focus on weaponry and wealth, on generals and statesmen, on battle plans and grand strategies. Yet soldiers matter as much as all the above. At a time when our policies from Iraq and Afghanistan to Congo and Colombia depend on helping other countries develop strong, effective, dependable militaries—which are only attainable if they have good soldiers to fill them out—Newsome's approach could hardly be more timely."

Richard K. Betts

"An impressively comprehensive and trenchant investigation of one of the most important but understudied issues in military effectiveness."

Dr. Stephen Biddle

"The defense planning community has tended to overemphasize material contributors to combat effectiveness, with potentially serious consequences. Bruce Newsome helps to correct this tendency with a wide ranging tour d'horizon of one of the most important nonmaterial contributors: the performance of the individual soldiers that comprise the military organization."

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